The Sinking of the Laconia
The Sinking of the Laconia | |
---|---|
![]() UK DVD cover | |
Genre | Drama |
Written by | Alan Bleasdale |
Directed by | Uwe Janson |
Starring |
Andrew Buchan Brian Cox Ken Duken Lindsay Duncan Matthias Koeberlin Thomas Kretschmann Frederick Lau Morven Christie Franka Potente Ludovico Fremont |
Country of origin |
United Kingdom Germany |
Original language(s) | English & German |
No. of episodes | 2x90 minutes |
Production | |
Running time | 180 minutes |
Release | |
Original network |
BBC2 Das Erste SWR Fernsehen |
Original release | 6 January – 7 January 2011, BBC2, 21:00 [Part 2] | , BBC2, 21:00 [Part 1]
External links | |
Website |
The Sinking of the Laconia is a two-part TV film, first aired on 6 and 7 January 2011 on BBC Two, about the Laconia incident; the sinking of the British ocean liner RMS Laconia during World War II by a German U-boat, which then, together with three other U-boats and an Italian submarine, rescued the passengers but was in turn attacked by an American bomber.
The film is a British-German co-production, written by Alan Bleasdale, directed by Uwe Janson, and with Andrew Buchan, Brian Cox, Ken Duken, Morven Christie, Lindsay Duncan, Thomas Kretschmann and Franka Potente in the leading roles.
Story
![](../I/m/RMS_Laconia_Crest.jpg)
Six hundred miles from the coast of Africa, in September 1942, a German U-boat, U-156, sinks the British troopship Laconia which is en route from Cape Town to the United Kingdom.[lower-alpha 1]
When realising that there are POWs and civilians on board, and that they are facing certain death without rescue, U-boat Commander Werner Hartenstein (Duken) makes a decision which goes against the orders of German high command. The U-boat surfaces and Hartenstein instructs his men to save as many of the shipwrecked survivors as they can.[lower-alpha 2] Hartenstein also attempts to dive with all the survivors on board and, though this puts the submarine into a crash dive, control is regained and it resurfaces. He also has a Red Cross flag displayed and a message sent to the Allies to organise a rescue of the survivors. The Italian prisoners are taken off U-156 by another U-boat and an Italian submarine.[lower-alpha 3]
Sierra Leone had informed the Americans to look for Laconia survivors but not of the submarine's rescue efforts. Soon after the Americans' attack, U-156 resumes her hunting duties, leaving behind the lifeboats with the British survivors to be picked up by a Vichy naval surface ship sent by Karl Dönitz. While admiring Hartenstein's actions, Dönitz also reluctantly composes the Laconia Order to other U-boat commanders not to rescue survivors in future. The French ship arrives; one lifeboat leaves the others to make for the coast of west Africa, which it eventually reaches. One British merchant seaman is injured in the American attack and remains with U-156 until it reaches port, where he is taken into captivity. Dönitz awards Hartenstein the Ritterkreuz and offers him a desk job at naval command. Preferring to remain with his men, Hartenstein refuses it and a final on screen message reports U-156's later sinking with no survivors.
Production
The production is a cooperation of the British BBC with the German ARD Degeto and SWR Fernsehen, executed by TalkbackThames and Teamworx.[2][3] The idea to bring the story of the Laconia to screen was conceived in 2004 by Talkback Thames Head of Drama Johnathan Young.[4]
Full cast
RMS Laconia
- Andrew Buchan - Junior Third Officer Thomas Mortimer, RMS Laconia
- Franka Potente - Hilda Smith, passenger, RMS Laconia
- Lindsay Duncan - Elisabeth Fullwood, passenger, RMS Laconia
- Brian Cox - Captain Sharp, RMS Laconia
- David Butler - First Officer Steel, RMS Laconia
- Morven Christie - Laura Ferguson, passenger, RMS Laconia
- Jodi Balfour - Sarah Fullwood, passenger, RMS Laconia
- Nicholas Burns - Captain Benjamin Coutts, British Army
- Ciarán McMenamin - Declan McDermott, wine steward, RMS Laconia
- Lenny Wood - Billy Hardacre, trimmer, RMS Laconia
- Ben Crompton - Harry Townes, acting leading seaman, RMS Laconia
- Matthew Aubrey - Corporal William Williams, cook, British Army
- Ludovico Fremont - Di Giovanni, Italian POW
- Paul Hilton - Henry Bates, passenger, RMS Laconia
- Louise Barnes - Mary Bates, passenger, RMS Laconia
- Josef du Plessis - Anthony Bates, passenger, RMS Laconia
- Rebekah Nathan - Charlotte Bates, passenger, RMS Laconia
- Richard Firth - Quartermaster, RMS Laconia
- Tom Fairfoot - Wireless Operator, RMS Laconia
- Lawrence Joffe - Sergeant Rudzinski, Free Polish Army
U-156
- Ken Duken - Korvettenkapitän Werner Hartenstein, captain, U-156
- Jacob Matschenz - Oberleutnant zur See Mannesmann, first officer, U-156
- Matthias Koeberlin - Oberleutnant (Ing.) Rostau, chief engineer, U-156
- Oskar Brown - Waldemar, U-156
- Frederick Lau - Fiedler, wireless operator, U-156
- Jörg Malkow - Weber, wireless operator, U-156
- Stefan Rudolf - Remmert, U-156
- Hermanus Pieters - Dengler, U-156
Sierra Leone
- Danny Keogh - Captain Hathaway, Royal Navy
- James Alexander - Lieutenant Lincoln, Royal Navy
- Ian van der Heyden - Lieutenant Jackson, Royal Navy
U-boat command
- Thomas Kretschmann - Admiral Karl Dönitz, Commander of U-Boats
- Nikolai Kinski - Korvettenkapitän Walter Drexler, Dönitz's aide
Ascension Island
- Jannes Eiselen - Captain Robert C. Richardson III, USAAF
- Grant Swanby - Colonel Ronin, USAAF
- Darron Meyer - Harrower, pilot, USAAF Liberator
- Nicholas Pauling - Perlman, navigator, USAAF Liberator
- Charlie Keegan - Ches, gunner, USAAF Liberator
- Justin Shaw - Chuck Bannister, gunner, USAAF Liberator
- Marius Botha - Coleman, bombardier, USAAF Liberator
Other
- Simon Verhoeven - Korvettenkapitän Harro Schacht, captain, U-507
- Paul Savage - Egyptian Customs Officer
Follow-up programme
On 9 January 2011, BBC Two broadcast a half-hour documentary, The Sinking of the Laconia: Survivors' Stories, featuring testimonies from the actual survivors of the Laconia. Beginning 14 April 2012, Ovation television aired The Sinking of the Laconia in the United States.[5]
See also
Footnotes
- ↑ Laconia carries 1,800 Italian POWs, 80 British women and children, 103 Free Poles and 268 British soldiers guarding the prisoners, and a 136-man crew; in total 2,700 people.[1]
- ↑ U-156 crams 200 people on board the surfaced submarine, takes another 200 in tow in four lifeboats, and tries to give relief to the remaining shipwrecked who surround the U-boat in lifeboats and small rafts.[1]
- ↑ The submarine is correctly called the Comandante Cappellini, who actually participated in the rescue operations
References
- 1 2 Chapter about the Laconia Affair in Clay Blair's book The Hunted, 1942-1945 Retrieved 2011-01-08
- ↑ BBC Press Statement
- ↑ UFActs No. 89, December 2009
- ↑ The Independent 15 July 2010: "After 24 years, Alan Bleasdale is back on the BBC" Retrieved 2011-01-08
- ↑ http://Ovtn.tv/ma